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This handy guide from The Mirror explains everything to do with Guy Fawkes Night, from the man himself to the plot that made him infamous.

Who was Guy Fawkes?

He was born on April 13th 1570 in Stonegate in York, and was educated at St. Peter's School in York, preferring to be called Guido Fawkes.

As a boy he lived near York with his father Edward and his mother Edith.

His father was a Protestant and worked as a solicitor for the religious court of the church. However, in 1579 he died and three years later his mother remarried a man called Denis Bainbridge, a Catholic. So the young Guy converted.

Why did converting to Catholicism matter?

Converting to Catholicism in those days was a big deal, as the ruling religion was the Church of England, which would not tolerate Roman Catholicism.

It was incredibly hard to worship, so devotees were driven underground - and it was from that oppression that the plot sprung.

There have been rumours that Guy met and married Maria Pulleyn in 1590 – but there are no parish records to show this, so it is open to dispute.

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What happened next?

So fervent were Guy's religious beliefs that he first choose to leave Protestant England and enlist in the Spanish army in Holland in the Eighty Years War.

There he won a reputation for great courage and cool determination and this is where he gained experience with explosives, and also where he decided to call himself Guido - probably because it sounded Spanish.

In 1604 at Ostend, Guy met another Englishman called Thomas Winter, who had also been in Spain trying to drum up support for English Catholics.

As the two travelled back to London, Thomas told Guy that he and his friends - including Yorkshiremen John and Christopher Wright, from Welwick, and Robert Catesby - were going to take action, but needed the help of a military man who would not be recognised by the authorities.

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The aftermath

This led to a search of Westminster Palace being ordered and in the early hours of November 5, Guy was discovered guarding the explosives.

Initially he pretended to be a servant and said the wood belonged to his master Thomas Percy but when this was reported to the King, and the fact that Percy was a Catholic, the King ordered a second search. The gunpowder was found and Guy was arrested.

The arrest of Guy Fawkes in the cellars of Parliament (Image: Getty)

During his involvement in the Gunpowder Plot, Fawkes called himself John Johnson and when he was arrested and asked to give his name, this is the name he gave.

Shortly after being found early in the morning of November 5, the Privy Council met in the King's bedchamber and Fawkes was brought in under guard and asked explain why he wanted to kill him and blow up Parliament.

He answered that he regarded the King as a disease since he had been excommunicated by the Pope.

Asked why he he needed such a huge quantity of gunpowder, he apparently said: "To blow you Scotch beggars back to your own native mountains!"

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Send him to the tower!

Guy was sent to the Tower of London. King James indicated in a letter of 6 November that "The gentler tortours are to be first used unto him, and so by degrees proceeding to the worst, and so God speed your goode worke"

And over the next four days, he was questioned and tortured on the “rack” and eventually confessed and gave the names of his conspirators.

His signature on the written confession after torture, which is still held by the National Archives, was very faint and weak, and another taken a few days later was much bolder indicating how weakened he must have been by torture.

The execution of Guy Fawkes and his associates (Image: Getty)

The trial...

Fawkes and others involved were tried on January 31st 1606 and then sentenced to be hung, drawn and quartered in the Old Palace Yard in Westminster.

The Attorney General Sir Edward Coke told the court that each of the condemned would be drawn backwards to his death, by a horse, his head near the ground.

They were to be "put to death halfway between heaven and earth as unworthy of both".

Their genitals would be cut off and burnt before their eyes, and their bowels and hearts removed.

They would then be decapitated, and the dismembered parts of their bodies displayed so that they might become "prey for the fowls of the air".